Similarities Between Turkish and Turkmen

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  • čas přidán 23. 07. 2022
  • How similar are Turkish and Turkmen? What is the difference between them? Although the languages share a lot in common, the degree of mutual intelligibility can vary.
    In this video Mihriban, Mayra, and Ekin will demonstrate to what extent Turkish speakers can understand the Turkmen language.
    Contact me on Instagram if you'd like to participate in a future video: / bahadoralast
    The Turkish language, which is also referred to as Istanbul Turkish, is the most widely spoken of the Turkic languages, with most of its native speakers living in Western Asia, and significant group of speakers in Germany, Bulgaria, Macedonia, Northern Cyprus, Greece, the Caucasus, and other parts of Europe and Central Asia. Ottoman Turkish, which was a variation of the Turkish spoken today, influenced many parts of Europe during the time that the Ottoman Empire expanded. When the modern Turkish republic was established, one of Atatürk's Reforms consisted of changing the Ottoman Turkish alphabet with a Latin alphabet. Today, Turkish is recognized as a minority language in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Greece, Iraq, Macedonia, and Romania.
    The Turkmen language (türkmen dili) is a member of the Oghuz branch of the Turkic languages and it is spoken by the Turkmens of Central Asia, primarily in Turkmenistan where it has official status, and also in Iran and Afghanistan which both have a significant Turkmen community.
    The Turkic languages consist of over 35 different documented languages, originating from East Asia. Turkish has the highest number of native speakers out of all Turkic language. There is a high degree of mutual intelligibility among the various Oghuz languages, which include Turkish, Azerbaijani, Turkmen, Qashqai, Gagauz, Balkan Gagauz Turkish and Oghuz-influenced Crimean Tatar.

Komentáře • 886

  • @BahadorAlast
    @BahadorAlast  Před rokem +95

    Please keep in mind that the participants in these videos do not see the text that appears on the screen, so for them it's more challenging than the viewers. In addition to that, we decided to have these Turkmen proverbs that I think are very meaningful and interesting but of course, unlike ordinary simple sentences they can be a bit more difficult to translate.
    Hope you guys enjoy it!! Contact me on Instagram if you'd like to participate in a future video: instagram.com/BahadorAlast

  • @jelenaivanovic4216
    @jelenaivanovic4216 Před rokem +335

    I had such a fun trip to Turkey recently!! Lovely people, amazing food, great culture, wonderful nightlife! Greetings from Serbia 🇷🇸

    • @dragasan
      @dragasan Před rokem +8

      @Jelena Ivanović I think it's great that you like Turkey! I am currently in Serbia for another 3 weeks then heading to Turkey. Serbia is great too! :)

    • @jelenaivanovic4216
      @jelenaivanovic4216 Před rokem +6

      @@dragasan Thanks dear. I'm happy to know you enjoyed Serbia. Welcome back any time ❤

    • @MrAllmightyCornholioz
      @MrAllmightyCornholioz Před rokem +6

      If 🇷🇸/🇭🇷 had a baby with 🇹🇷, does it become 🇧🇦?

    • @dragasan
      @dragasan Před rokem +2

      @@jelenaivanovic4216 It is my first time in Serbia and the Serbian people have been very kind to me, and who doesn't like Čevapčiči? 👍🏻

    • @ozanbayrak562
      @ozanbayrak562 Před rokem +4

      @@MrAllmightyCornholioz no; it would be probably 🇲🇰

  • @user-zh7yr1up8g
    @user-zh7yr1up8g Před rokem +83

    I love how at first when they heard it was difficult but as they went forward they managed to understand so much more and did a fantastic job overall. That's really cool and shows how smart they are. Well done!!

    • @selmademirdogen4376
      @selmademirdogen4376 Před rokem +3

      They're surely smart but it has nothing to do with being smart. They all speak Turkish in different accents. That's why they understand easily in minutes.

  • @Turk_Union
    @Turk_Union Před rokem +43

    if you cried with sincerity, tears would come out of even a blind eye. İhlas ile ağlasan, kör gözden yaş gelir.

  • @gpodkolzin
    @gpodkolzin Před rokem +143

    Very interesting and meaningful.
    As a Ukrainian born and raised in Crimea in Southern Ukraine, I would like to see Crimean Tatar in your videos.

    • @Azam-ry5ig
      @Azam-ry5ig Před rokem +12

      Crimean Tatar Vs Tatar would be great

    • @hakanbaybars4435
      @hakanbaybars4435 Před rokem +7

      Crimean Tatar is very close to Turkish

    • @gpodkolzin
      @gpodkolzin Před rokem +4

      @@hakanbaybars4435 I wouldn't say Crimean Tatar (at least its literary form, as well as Central and Steppe dialects) is particularly close to Turkish.

    • @Abeturk
      @Abeturk Před rokem

      Su=water /水 (Suv)=fluent-flowing Suvu> Sıvı=fluid, liquid
      Suv-up =liquefied (~soup)
      Suv-mak= to make it flow onwards or upwards (>suvamak)
      Suy-mak= to make it flow over
      Süv-mek= to make it flow inwards
      Sür-mek= to make it flow ON something
      Sur-up(şurup)=syrup / Suruppah(chorba)=soup /Suruppat(şerbet)=sorbet /meşrubat=beverage /şarap=wine
      Süp-mek= to make it flow outwards / Süp-der-mek>süptürmek>süpürmek=to sweep
      Say-mak= to make it flow drop by drop (one by one from the mind) = ~ to count ~ to deem (sayı=number) (bilgisayar=computer)
      Söy-mek= to make it flow from the mind / Söy-le-mek= to make the sentences flowing through the mind = to say, ~to tell
      Sev-mek= to make it flow(pour) from the mind to the heart = to love
      Söv-mek=to say whatever's on own mind (~call names)
      Süy-mek= to make it flow through (Süyüt> süt= milk)
      Soy-mak= to make it flow over it/him/her ( to peel, ~to strip, ~to rob ) (Suy-en-mak)>soyunmak=to undress
      (Suy-der-mak)>sıyırmak= ~skinning , ~skimming
      Siy-mek= to make it flow downwards / to pee Siyitik>sidik= urine
      Sağ-mak= ~to make it pour down (Sağanak=downpour)
      Sağ-en-mak>Sağınmak= ~to spill it from thought into emotions> ~longing
      Sağn-mak>San-mak= ~to get it pour from thought to idea(to arrive at a guess)
      Sak-en-mak> Sakınmak =~to ponder hard/ worry out/ beware
      Sav-mak= ~to make it pour outward /put forward / set forth in >Sahan=the container to pour water
      (Sav-en-mak)>savunmak=to defend (Sav-en-al-mak)>savunulmak=to get being defended
      (Sav-eş-mak)1.savaşmak=to pour blood / to shed each other's blood (savaş= war)
      2.savuşmak=to get spilled around (altogether/downright)> sıvışmak=~running away in fear
      Soğ-mak=to penetrate inwards Soğ-der-mak>soğurmak=~ make it spread in own essence
      Sok-mak= ~to put/take it (by forcing) inward
      Sök-mek= ~take/put it (by forcing) outward (~unstitch)
      Sık-mak = ~to squeeze (by forcing)/tighten (Sıkı= stringent)
      Sığ-mak= ~fit inside
      Süz-mek=~to make it lightly flow from up to downwards (~to filter, strain out)
      Sez-mek=~to make it lightly flow into the mind (~to perceive, to intuit)
      Sız-mak=~to get flowed slightly/slowly (~to infiltrate)
      Suŋ-mak=to extend forwards (presentation, exhibition, to offer)
      Süŋ-mek=to get expanded outwards (sünger=sponge) (süngü=bayonet)
      Sıŋ-mak=to reach by extending up or forwards
      Siŋ-mek=to shrink (oneself) by getting down or back (to lurk, to hide out)
      Söŋ-mek=to get decreased by getting out or in oneself (to get extinguished)
      mak/mek>(emek)=exertion /process
      al-mak =~to get/ ~to have
      et-mek=~ to make /~to do
      der-mek= ~to provide
      en=own diameter
      eş=partner
      Tan= the dawn /旦
      Tanımak= to recognize (~to get the differences of)
      Tanılamak=tanı-la-mak= diagnose /to identify
      Tanınmak = tanı-en-mak= to be known/recognized
      Tanıtmak = tanı-et-mak=to make known /to introduce
      Tanışmak=tanı-eş-mak= to get to know each other =(to meet for the first time)
      Danışmak= to get information through each other
      Tıŋı= the tune (timbre) /调 /ட்யூன்
      Tıŋ-mak=to react verbally
      Tıŋı-la-mak= to get the sound out >(Tınlamak=~reacting /answering /~to take heed of)
      Tiŋ-mek=to get at the silence >Dinmek= to calm down / to get quiescent
      Tiŋi-le-mek=to get the sound in >(Dinlemek= to listen / 听)
      Çığ (chuw) = snowslide / 雪崩
      Çığ-ur-mak =çığırmak= ~to scream / ~to sing shouting
      Çığırı > Jigir > Shiur> Şiir = Poetry / 诗歌
      Cır-la-mak > Jırlamak > to squeal / shouting with a shrill noise
      Çığırgı > Jırgı> Shuirgı> Şarkı = Song / 曲子
      Çağ-ur-mak =çağırmak= calling - inviting / 称呼 / 邀请
      Çağrı = Calling / 称呼
      Uç > ~up-side (endpoint) (o-bir-uç=burç=extreme point= bourge) / tepe=~top-point
      (Uç-mak)= to fly (~go up)
      (Uç-a-var)> Uçar=it flies (has a chance to fly / arrives by flying)
      (Uç-ma-bas)> uçmaz= doesn't fly (~gives up flying / doesn't bother to fly)
      (Uç-der-ma-bas) >uçturmaz> uçurmaz= doesn't fly it (doesn't make it fly)
      (Uç-eş-ma-bas)>uçuşmaz= doesn't (all)together fly
      (Uç-al-ma-bas)>uçulmaz= no one has gotten to fly /~no one's allowed to fly
      İç > ~in-side (inner)
      (İç-mek) = to drink (include inside) / İç-der-mek> içermek= to contain
      (Bu Adam Çay İç-e-er)>> Bu adam çay içer=This man gets to drink tea>This man drinks tea then
      (Aç-mak)= to open (to see/show inside)
      (Aş-mak)=~to exceed /go beyond
      Dış> ~out-side
      (Dış-a-aş-mak)>Taşmak =~overflow
      Taş = the stone
      Taşı-mak =~to move it to a different place
      Taşı-et-mak =Taşıtmak> to make it moved to a different place
      Taşı-en-mak =Taşınmak>~to move ownself to a different place
      Der-mek= (~to provide) to set the layout by bringing together (der-le-mek= to compile)
      Dar-mak= to bring into a different order by disrupting the old (thara-mak=to comb)
      Dur-mak= to keep being present/there (~to remain/~to survive)
      thuror =permanent /hë thor>hıdır>hızır>hazır=existent>ready (boğa-thor>bahadır=hero)
      Dur-der-mak> durdurmak= ~to stop
      Dür-mek= to roll it up (to make it become a roll)
      Dör-mek= to rotate on its axis ( Thörmek>old meaning)- to stir /to mix (current meaning)
      (döngü)törüş/törüv=tour (törüv-çi / törüv-giş=tourist / thörük halk=mixed people among themself
      (Thöre-mek)>türemek= to get created a new layout/form by coming together in the same medium (tür= kind / type)
      Töre=the order established over time= custom/tradition > (torah=sacred order) (tarih=history)
      Thör-et-mek=türetmek= to create a new layout by adding in each other= to derive
      Thör-en-mek>dörünmek= to rotate oneself /(2. to turn by oneself)
      Thör-en-mek>>dörn-mek>Dönmek= to turn oneself
      (Dön-der-mek)>döndürmek= to turn something
      (Dön-eş-mek)>dönüşmek= to turn (altogether) to something
      (Dön-eş-der-mek)>dönüştürmek= to convert/ to transform
      Eğ-mek=to turn something the other way or to a curved shape> eğmek= to tilt/ to bend
      Eğ-al-mek=Eğilmek=to get being inclined/ to be bent over
      Eğ-et-mek=Eğitmek=to educate
      Eğir-mek= to turn around itself by bending it or make it turn to another way in a specified time =~ to spin (eğri =curve /awry)
      Evir-mek=to make it turn upside or turn up in other way over a specified time =~to invert /make it turn to something different in a specified time
      Eğir-al-mek=Eğrilmek= to become a skew / to become twisted
      Evir-al-mek=Evrilmek= to get a conversion/transformation over time
      (evrim=evolution evren=universe)
      Uğra-mak= to get (at) a place or a situation for a specified time> uğramak= drop by/ stop by
      Uğra-eş-mak=to stop altogether by into each other for a specified time> uğraşmak=to strive/ to deal with
      Uğra-et-mak= uğratmak = to put in a situation for a specific time (uğru = the way of)
      Öğre-mek=to get (at) a status or a level / to get an accumulation within a certain time
      Öğre-en-mek=to get (at) a knowledge or a knowledge level at a certain time> öğrenmek= to learn
      Öğre-et-mek=to have somebody get (at) a knowledge / level (at a certain time)= to teach
      Türkçe öğretiyorum =I am teaching turkish
      İngilizce öğreniyorsun = You are learning english
      Öğreniyorsun = You are learning > Öğren-i-yor-u-sen= You try to learn
      Öğreniyorum = I am learning
      Öğreniyordum = I was learning
      Öğreniyormuşum=I heard/realized that I was learning
      Öğrenmekteyim=I have been learning / I am in (the process of) learning
      Öğrenmekteydim=I had been learning / I was in (the process of) learning
      Öğrenmekteymişim=I heard/noticed that I had been learning
      Öğrenirim =~ I learn (then) > Öğren-e-er-im= I get to learn
      Öğrenirdim= ~I used to learn / I would learn (~I‘d get (a chance) to learn )
      Öğrenirmişim=I heard/noticed that I would be learning ( I realized I’ve got (a chance) to learn)
      Öğreneceğim= I will learn
      Öğrenecektim= I would gonna learn (I would learn)
      Öğrenecekmişim=I heard/ realized that I would have to learn
      Öğrendim = I learned
      Öğrenmiştim= I had learned
      Öğrenmiş oldum (öğrenmiş durumdayım)= I have learned
      Öğrendiydim= I remember having learned /I remember such that I've learned
      Öğrenmişim =I noticed that I've learned
      Öğrendiymişim=I heard that I’ve learned -but if what I heard is true
      Öğrenmişmişim=I heard that I've learned -but what I heard didn't sound very convincing
      Öğreniyorumdur =I guess/likely I am learning
      Öğreniyordurum =I think/likely I was trying to learn
      Öğreniyormuşumdur=As if I was probably learning
      Öğreneceğimdir= I think that I will probably learn
      Öğrenecektirim=I guess/likely I would gonna learn
      Öğrenecekmişimdir=As if I would probably have to learn
      Öğrenecekmiştirim=Seems that I would probably be learned
      Öğrenmişimdir = I think that I have probably learned
      Öğrenmiştirim= I guess/likely I had learned
      𐱅𐰇𐰼𐰰

    • @ebzk4700
      @ebzk4700 Před rokem +7

      I am turkish and i would understand crimean

  • @ilyasakhundzada6604
    @ilyasakhundzada6604 Před rokem +71

    As an Azerbaijani I can understand many of written Turkmen words but it is difficult to catch them by ear.

    • @caglganmemendik8451
      @caglganmemendik8451 Před rokem +3

      Same (I'm from Turkey)

    • @metmela204
      @metmela204 Před rokem +5

      türkmenceyi yazıyla %75, konuşmayla %5 seviyesinde anlıyorum.

    • @metmela204
      @metmela204 Před rokem +1

      @@budgiejournal örneğin ben

    • @richcrown1176
      @richcrown1176 Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@caglganmemendik8451same from uzbekistan

  • @karagckn
    @karagckn Před rokem +94

    Bence derin atasözleri yerine daha az mecaz olan ifadeleri anlamak hiç sorun olmazdı ve içerik böyle olmalıydı. Bu atasözleri ile bile anlaşabiliyorsak Türkçe ve Türkmence hiç uzak değil birbirlerine. Üstelik Türk atasözleri bin bir anlam taşıyabilir yani Türkiye de herhangi bir atasözünü birine sorsan tam cevabı veremeyebilir.

    • @niwstock
      @niwstock Před rokem +13

      İşte tam da o yüzden biraz zorlandık, ama yinede dediğim gibi anlaşılmadı beklediğimden kolaydı

    • @orkunberkb1850
      @orkunberkb1850 Před rokem +14

      Bence aşırı kolaydı hepsi, yani oradakiler üzerine bu kadar konuşacak, soracak ne buldu anlamadım. Hele "bolmak" ne demek diye sorunca kız, aşırı şaşırdım. Bariz yani olmak. Sadece "sokur"un anlamını herkes bilmeyebilir kabul ediyorum, ben farklı sebepten ötürü biliyordum. Bir de ilim derken ülkem mi diyor yoksa bilgi manasında ilim mi diyor ondan tam emin olamadım başta.

    • @niwstock
      @niwstock Před rokem +7

      @@orkunberkb1850 videoda olunca o heyecanla kolay olmuyor dostum, denemeni öneririm

    • @godofchaoskhorne5043
      @godofchaoskhorne5043 Před rokem +1

      @@niwstock kardeş Mayra etnik Türk değil mi? İsmini daha önce hiç duymadım ayrıca 2015'de Hollandaya taşınmış xd... 2015de Hizmetçi/ Gülen tarikatından batı Avrupa, kanada ve amerikaya çok kaçan oldu.

    • @niwstock
      @niwstock Před rokem +6

      @@godofchaoskhorne5043 çok güldüm buna umarım ironidir

  • @edward8597
    @edward8597 Před rokem +36

    The first time I heard Turkmen was a video on CZcams of a news report from Turkmen television. I just watched a minute or two and said, "Nope. I can't get this. It's too different". But watching a video like this, you can see that, for a Turkish speaker, it's not a matter of learning a new language so much as a matter of adjusting your ears (and imagination) a little. I feel like spending just a week or two in Ashgabad would probably be enough to "get" most Turkmen.

    • @togrulbeg764
      @togrulbeg764 Před rokem +5

      Tbh, i as a Türkmen from afganistan can't understand Türkmen news channel clearly... its different from our dialect a bit... the slippery s and z sounds make it more difficult

  • @totanchowdhury3808
    @totanchowdhury3808 Před rokem +15

    Watching this video just after a massive 7.8 magnitude earthquake hit Türkiye and Syria. 22000 lives lost, properties damaged. My heart goes out to the people of those countries. Lovely people, lovely language. 🇹🇷💓
    Take love from India (🇮🇳)

    • @sunsun9372
      @sunsun9372 Před rokem +1

      Hindistana yardımları için minnettarım. 🙏🏻❤ Maalesef 22 bin değil 50 bin kişi öldü 😔

    • @totanchowdhury3808
      @totanchowdhury3808 Před rokem

      @@sunsun9372Buraya yorum yaptığımda 22 bindi. Daha sonra bu sayı 50 bine yükseldi.

    • @m.ercan70
      @m.ercan70 Před rokem +2

      Guzel sozlerin icin saol kardesim

    • @totanchowdhury3808
      @totanchowdhury3808 Před rokem

      ​@@m.ercan70rica ederim kardeşim

  • @muctebanesiri
    @muctebanesiri Před 3 měsíci +3

    Wow Turkmen isn't only a beautiful language but also full of meaningfulness.
    As an Azerbaijani speaker I could understand everything and watching Mayra and Ekin trying to guess was so much fun 😂

  • @bobby_6455
    @bobby_6455 Před rokem +62

    I understood everything Turkmen lady said and I'm from Uzbekistan, even proverbs are the same, I never noticed we are that similar since as an Uzbek man, I'm not that much exposed to their culture and language. I recently found your channel and love your videos keep it up man

    • @user-ki2um9cl8j
      @user-ki2um9cl8j Před rokem +7

      Мин дя тошендем, татар булсам да

    • @user-mx1rf8vs7i
      @user-mx1rf8vs7i Před rokem +1

      ​@@user-ki2um9cl8j manda tushundim sizning yozganingizni 😅

    • @sunsun9372
      @sunsun9372 Před rokem +3

      Türkiye'den selamlar kardeşim 🤗❤💙

    • @ismailtoprakci9593
      @ismailtoprakci9593 Před 8 měsíci

      They all altay language family.

    • @ZedusA-yc6en
      @ZedusA-yc6en Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@user-mx1rf8vs7i ben de düşündüm sizin yazdığınızı :)
      For the original comment owner; actually Turkmen and Turkish language are both oghuz turkic dialects that is similiar along with gagauz language, azerbaijani and khorasan turkmen languages and i think uzbek language is in called chagatai/karluk turkic language along with uighur language from east turkestan, if you could understand turkmen not as much as but i think you could understand turkish as well :)

  • @mahirhaxhiu7846
    @mahirhaxhiu7846 Před rokem +22

    Not only are you bringing people together and making educational and fun videos for us to enjoy but I just realized those who participate in the video are so excited so you're also making them happy too

  • @vasifbabazade5910
    @vasifbabazade5910 Před rokem +60

    As an Azerbaijani, I immediately understood the first and last sentences, the 2nd and 3rd sentences had words I didn't know, but I could guess the general meaning

    • @farzadabdollahi4797
      @farzadabdollahi4797 Před rokem +13

      Yeah azerbaijani turkish is like a bridge between them, I nearly understood all of them too.

    • @saidtandogan6311
      @saidtandogan6311 Před rokem +12

      As a Turkish guy, I understood most of them. These are very understandable words. The literature knowledge of the Turks in the video is kinda weak :)

    • @user-mx1rf8vs7i
      @user-mx1rf8vs7i Před rokem +6

      Same here. But me from Uzbekistan

    • @SezerToker0
      @SezerToker0 Před rokem

      As a Turk I immediately understood too except two words. I think they were trolling. If you watch carefully they always acting like they solved it out then "oh no wait its not coming"...

    • @user-ki2um9cl8j
      @user-ki2um9cl8j Před rokem +2

      мин татар буларак ботенесен (хаммасен) анладым.

  • @berkcandar8013
    @berkcandar8013 Před rokem +55

    I really appreciate you making this! As Turks who have lived in the West for so long but stillxconnected strongly with the language we always crave to watch these beautiful programs which are teaching us a lot. I want to congratulate Mayra and Ekin for the fine job they did because we know for sure that Turkmen pronunciation can be very differn and since you're not seeing the writing that throws a rench in it. Thank you again!

    • @niwstock
      @niwstock Před rokem +2

      Thank you so much Berk

  • @arzygulhallyeva6464
    @arzygulhallyeva6464 Před rokem +19

    It was a nice video .I am from Turkmenistan too 🇹🇲 .Please make such video a lot

    • @AhmetHaktan-gn9xe
      @AhmetHaktan-gn9xe Před 3 měsíci

      Men Türk , Türkmen gardaşlarymyza salam bolsun. Men Türkmenistany gowy söýýaryn.

  • @letsTAKObout_it
    @letsTAKObout_it Před rokem +14

    I love this. Just starting to get into Turkish, so loving your videos on these related languages! You always find the best participants! Thanks for posting!

    • @PimsleurTurkishLessons
      @PimsleurTurkishLessons Před rokem

      you can learn Turkish at basic level in a month by listening 30 minutes pimsleur lessons per day. then you can listen glossika Turkish-English sentences from easy to hard order in my channel. here are also stories and grammar lessons. video lists. Also i made a video named "Turkish words from Nature sounds". you can learn easily such words. and remember them. with their nature sounds.

  • @FifthCat5
    @FifthCat5 Před rokem +14

    Love these participants! Hope you feature them in future Turkish/Turkmen videos.

  • @EthemD
    @EthemD Před rokem +36

    I absolutely love the energy and motivation of the participants 😍 to which I could somehow totally relate to hehe 😜 was so much fun watching this and also guessing the proverbs, thanks to you four! And indeed I'd be totally up for watching another episode of this - the great thing about proverbs is also that they tell a story and more about the culture 😁 Turkic cultures used to measure things with their hands for example, that's why that is used in all those idioms and sayings.

  • @ferhatozturk3571
    @ferhatozturk3571 Před rokem +22

    To be honest i was very surprised with myself how much i did understand turkmen. The difficulty for the participants was the fact they did just hear it and could not read it and more important than that the fact that the phrases were metaphoric/poetic sayings.

  • @serhanbaygon5126
    @serhanbaygon5126 Před rokem +28

    Proverbs are often difficult to understand if you are not a native speaker. Because they have metaphor, you can't often take them literally. Our young friends -because they were so excited I guess- had difficulties to catch them in first. Beside, proverbs are difficult to translate to english. It was a nice video. Thanks for participants.👏🏻

  • @sevketcoskun2922
    @sevketcoskun2922 Před rokem +9

    Very nice. That's really great. Thank you Bahadır 👍🏼🍻

  • @buraksimsek7264
    @buraksimsek7264 Před rokem +14

    I was waiting for a Turkmen & Turkish video. Please do more!

  • @kara_toz
    @kara_toz Před rokem +26

    Such expressive and impressive sayings, I wrote all of them. Love from Azerbaijan province in Iran

    • @togrulbeg764
      @togrulbeg764 Před rokem +4

      Love from güney türkistan in afganistan🥰

    • @biyon2859
      @biyon2859 Před rokem

      ​@@togrulbeg764 there is not turkistan in Afganistan. It is a ariyan counrty

    • @togrulbeg764
      @togrulbeg764 Před rokem +1

      @@biyon2859 dude, we were here since 2000 years... Afghanistan was a Turkic land for thousands of years. You seriously need history lessons... combined Turkmen and uzbek populations amount to like 14 million which the pashtun fascist state hides fearing we might take over

    • @ozankahveci5248
      @ozankahveci5248 Před rokem

      Haaaaaa Aryan saçmalıktan başka birşey değil

    • @biyon2859
      @biyon2859 Před rokem

      @@ozankahveci5248 Turan sacmaliktir

  • @yaxshibala
    @yaxshibala Před rokem +5

    -(Turkmen)-Bilegi güýçli birini ýykar, bilimi güýçli müňini.
    -(Turkish)-Bileği güçlü birini yıkar, bilimi güçlü binini.
    -(Turkmen)-Yhlas bilen ağlasaň, sokur gözden ýaş çykar.
    -(Turkish)-ihlas ile ağlasan, kör gözden yaş çıkar.
    -(Turkmen)-ilim günüm bolmasa, aýym günüm dogmasyn.
    -(Turkish)-ilim günüm olmazsa, ayım günüm doğmasın.
    -(Turkmen/turkish)-başa bela iki parmak dilden geler/gelir.
    If you only deal with it for a few hours or days, you will understand almost everything...both languages ​​even have the same loanwords from Arabic and Persian. the pronunciations is just what doesn't let you understand it. i listen to a lot of turkmen and uzbek music and have hardly any problems understanding anything.
    Of course it is more difficult if even the parents speak high turkish (istanbul dialect)...for all the other ones especially those who are close to azerbaijan it is relatively easy

  • @marvelouson
    @marvelouson Před rokem +11

    This video is not enough. I'll be waiting for part 2. Even longer... ✌

  • @dragasan
    @dragasan Před rokem +3

    So cool, and I just love your guests!

  • @hassanalast6670
    @hassanalast6670 Před rokem +16

    Good to know many people around world are able to speak Turkish language such CA countries , China, Iran, part of Afghanistan and more......

    • @berkcandar8013
      @berkcandar8013 Před rokem

      Are you father of Bahadır?
      Do you speak Azerbaijani Turkish?

  • @anvartemir7877
    @anvartemir7877 Před rokem +32

    Bilegi küshti birdi jighar, bilimi küshti mingdi jighar Kazakh one 🇰🇿

    • @Eren-tv6rt
      @Eren-tv6rt Před rokem +17

      Bileği güçlü birini yıkar, bilimi güçlü binini yıkar.

    • @yunismirza
      @yunismirza Před rokem +9

      Biləyi güclü birini yıxar,elmi güclü minini yıxar🇦🇿

    • @togrulbeg764
      @togrulbeg764 Před rokem

      Küşti what is it?

    • @anvartemir7877
      @anvartemir7877 Před rokem +1

      @@togrulbeg764 küş+ti means strong or also can be used as cool, super

    • @user-ob6ct2wh5d
      @user-ob6ct2wh5d Před rokem +1

      @@hereusername well i think thats correct he just used gh besides of ğ and ng besides of ñ.

  • @fugenturkoglu
    @fugenturkoglu Před rokem +15

    Ekin's English and accent is amazing and sounds really good to ear.

  • @handsome-devilofficial8879

    is it only me or someone els has also just loved this turkish girl so much ? she is so nice person

    • @user-zh7yr1up8g
      @user-zh7yr1up8g Před rokem +9

      She is nice, smart and beautiful 😍

    • @bakteribaik156
      @bakteribaik156 Před rokem +3

      She look like mix of su burcu yazgi and Melisa senolsun

  • @alpaykasal2902
    @alpaykasal2902 Před rokem +1

    I love this group, they're so excited... the format in this particular video makes this difficult.

  • @S..K_
    @S..K_ Před rokem +2

    That was so interesting and cool. Please do another video on these languages 😊 nice people.

  • @AfG_313
    @AfG_313 Před rokem +2

    Your content is great bro

  • @lingux_yt
    @lingux_yt Před rokem +4

    the guys are thrilled 🤓 it's fun to watch

  • @fo6748
    @fo6748 Před rokem +9

    Lovely people ❤❤ and great show!

  • @arman11236
    @arman11236 Před rokem +3

    130th like!
    Bravo herkese. Harika bir klip ❤️

  • @sanudapilapitiya6223
    @sanudapilapitiya6223 Před rokem +4

    I also love to join with your videos. I really enjoying knowing about how these languages are working 👊😄

    • @TheInfinityy
      @TheInfinityy Před rokem +1

      Maybe Dhivehi vs Sinhala

    • @sanudapilapitiya6223
      @sanudapilapitiya6223 Před rokem

      @@TheInfinityy yeah that's also good idea 👊😄

    • @TheInfinityy
      @TheInfinityy Před rokem

      @@sanudapilapitiya6223 yeah dude.. Some Sinhala speaker should suggest this to the owner of channel. So far nobody did. 😂 You could have done that man..

  • @erfanizadi6050
    @erfanizadi6050 Před rokem +17

    wow such a interesting video...
    a Turkmen from iran

    • @Abeturk
      @Abeturk Před rokem

      Su=water /水 (Suv)=fluent-flowing Suvu> Sıvı=fluid, liquid
      Suv-up =liquefied (~soup)
      Suv-mak= to make it flow onwards or upwards (>suvamak)
      Suy-mak= to make it flow over
      Süv-mek= to make it flow inwards
      Sür-mek= to make it flow ON something
      Sur-up(şurup)=syrup / Suruppah(chorba)=soup /Suruppat(şerbet)=sorbet /meşrubat=beverage /şarap=wine
      Süp-mek= to make it flow outwards / Süp-der-mek>süptürmek>süpürmek=to sweep
      Say-mak= to make it flow drop by drop (one by one from the mind) = ~ to count ~ to deem (sayı=number) (bilgisayar=computer)
      Söy-mek= to make it flow from the mind / Söy-le-mek= to make the sentences flowing through the mind = to say, ~to tell
      Sev-mek= to make it flow(pour) from the mind to the heart = to love
      Söv-mek=to say whatever's on own mind (~call names)
      Süy-mek= to make it flow through (Süyüt> süt= milk)
      Soy-mak= to make it flow over it/him/her ( to peel, ~to strip, ~to rob ) (Suy-en-mak)>soyunmak=to undress
      (Suy-der-mak)>sıyırmak= ~skinning , ~skimming
      Siy-mek= to make it flow downwards / to pee Siyitik>sidik= urine
      Sağ-mak= ~to make it pour down (Sağanak=downpour)
      Sağ-en-mak>Sağınmak= ~to spill it from thought into emotions> ~longing
      Sağn-mak>San-mak= ~to get it pour from thought to idea(to arrive at a guess)
      Sak-en-mak> Sakınmak =~to ponder hard/ worry out/ beware
      Sav-mak= ~to make it pour outward /put forward / set forth in >Sahan=the container to pour water
      (Sav-en-mak)>savunmak=to defend (Sav-en-al-mak)>savunulmak=to get being defended
      (Sav-eş-mak)1.savaşmak=to pour blood / to shed each other's blood (savaş= war)
      2.savuşmak=to get spilled around (altogether/downright)> sıvışmak=~running away in fear
      Soğ-mak=to penetrate inwards Soğ-der-mak>soğurmak=~ make it spread in own essence
      Sok-mak= ~to put/take it (by forcing) inward
      Sök-mek= ~take/put it (by forcing) outward (~unstitch)
      Sık-mak = ~to squeeze (by forcing)/tighten (Sıkı= stringent)
      Sığ-mak= ~fit inside
      Süz-mek=~to make it lightly flow from up to downwards (~to filter, strain out)
      Sez-mek=~to make it lightly flow into the mind (~to perceive, to intuit)
      Sız-mak=~to get flowed slightly/slowly (~to infiltrate)
      Suŋ-mak=to extend forwards (presentation, exhibition, to offer)
      Süŋ-mek=to get expanded outwards (sünger=sponge) (süngü=bayonet)
      Sıŋ-mak=to reach by extending up or forwards
      Siŋ-mek=to shrink (oneself) by getting down or back (to lurk, to hide out)
      Söŋ-mek=to get decreased by getting out or in oneself (to get extinguished)
      mak/mek>(emek)=exertion /process
      al-mak =~to get/ ~to have
      et-mek=~ to make /~to do
      der-mek= ~to provide
      en=own diameter
      eş=partner
      Tan= the dawn /旦
      Tanımak= to recognize (~to get the differences of)
      Tanılamak=tanı-la-mak= diagnose /to identify
      Tanınmak = tanı-en-mak= to be known/recognized
      Tanıtmak = tanı-et-mak=to make known /to introduce
      Tanışmak=tanı-eş-mak= to get to know each other =(to meet for the first time)
      Danışmak= to get information through each other
      Tıŋı= the tune (timbre) /调 /ட்யூன்
      Tıŋ-mak=to react verbally
      Tıŋı-la-mak= to get the sound out >(Tınlamak=~reacting /answering /~to take heed of)
      Tiŋ-mek=to get at the silence >Dinmek= to calm down / to get quiescent
      Tiŋi-le-mek=to get the sound in >(Dinlemek= to listen / 听)
      Çığ (chuw) = snowslide / 雪崩
      Çığ-ur-mak =çığırmak= ~to scream / ~to sing shouting
      Çığırı > Jigir > Shiur> Şiir = Poetry / 诗歌
      Cır-la-mak > Jırlamak > to squeal / shouting with a shrill noise
      Çığırgı > Jırgı> Shuirgı> Şarkı = Song / 曲子
      Çağ-ur-mak =çağırmak= calling - inviting / 称呼 / 邀请
      Çağrı = Calling / 称呼
      Uç > ~up-side (endpoint) (o-bir-uç=burç=extreme point= bourge) / tepe=~top-point
      (Uç-mak)= to fly (~go up)
      (Uç-a-var)> Uçar=it flies (has a chance to fly / arrives by flying)
      (Uç-ma-bas)> uçmaz= doesn't fly (~gives up flying / doesn't bother to fly)
      (Uç-der-ma-bas) >uçturmaz> uçurmaz= doesn't fly it (doesn't make it fly)
      (Uç-eş-ma-bas)>uçuşmaz= doesn't (all)together fly
      (Uç-al-ma-bas)>uçulmaz= no one has gotten to fly /~no one's allowed to fly
      İç > ~in-side (inner)
      (İç-mek) = to drink (include inside) / İç-der-mek> içermek= to contain
      (Bu Adam Çay İç-e-er)>> Bu adam çay içer=This man gets to drink tea>This man drinks tea then
      (Aç-mak)= to open (to see/show inside)
      (Aş-mak)=~to exceed /go beyond
      Dış> ~out-side
      (Dış-a-aş-mak)>Taşmak =~overflow
      Taş = the stone
      Taşı-mak =~to move it to a different place
      Taşı-et-mak =Taşıtmak> to make it moved to a different place
      Taşı-en-mak =Taşınmak>~to move ownself to a different place
      Der-mek= (~to provide) to set the layout by bringing together (der-le-mek= to compile)
      Dar-mak= to bring into a different order by disrupting the old (thara-mak=to comb)
      Dur-mak= to keep being present/there (~to remain/~to survive)
      thuror =permanent /hë thor>hıdır>hızır>hazır=existent>ready (boğa-thor>bahadır=hero)
      Dur-der-mak> durdurmak= ~to stop
      Dür-mek= to roll it up (to make it become a roll)
      Dör-mek= to rotate on its axis ( Thörmek>old meaning)- to stir /to mix (current meaning)
      (döngü)törüş/törüv=tour (törüv-çi / törüv-giş=tourist / thörük halk=mixed people among themself
      (Thöre-mek)>türemek= to get created a new layout/form by coming together in the same medium (tür= kind / type)
      Töre=the order established over time= custom/tradition > (torah=sacred order) (tarih=history)
      Thör-et-mek=türetmek= to create a new layout by adding in each other= to derive
      Thör-en-mek>dörünmek= to rotate oneself /(2. to turn by oneself)
      Thör-en-mek>>dörn-mek>Dönmek= to turn oneself
      (Dön-der-mek)>döndürmek= to turn something
      (Dön-eş-mek)>dönüşmek= to turn (altogether) to something
      (Dön-eş-der-mek)>dönüştürmek= to convert/ to transform
      Eğ-mek=to turn something the other way or to a curved shape> eğmek= to tilt/ to bend
      Eğ-al-mek=Eğilmek=to get being inclined/ to be bent over
      Eğ-et-mek=Eğitmek=to educate
      Eğir-mek= to turn around itself by bending it or make it turn to another way in a specified time =~ to spin (eğri =curve /awry)
      Evir-mek=to make it turn upside or turn up in other way over a specified time =~to invert /make it turn to something different in a specified time
      Eğir-al-mek=Eğrilmek= to become a skew / to become twisted
      Evir-al-mek=Evrilmek= to get a conversion/transformation over time
      (evrim=evolution evren=universe)
      Uğra-mak= to get (at) a place or a situation for a specified time> uğramak= drop by/ stop by
      Uğra-eş-mak=to stop altogether by into each other for a specified time> uğraşmak=to strive/ to deal with
      Uğra-et-mak= uğratmak = to put in a situation for a specific time (uğru = the way of)
      Öğre-mek=to get (at) a status or a level / to get an accumulation within a certain time
      Öğre-en-mek=to get (at) a knowledge or a knowledge level at a certain time> öğrenmek= to learn
      Öğre-et-mek=to have somebody get (at) a knowledge / level (at a certain time)= to teach
      Türkçe öğretiyorum =I am teaching turkish
      İngilizce öğreniyorsun = You are learning english
      Öğreniyorsun = You are learning > Öğren-i-yor-u-sen= You try to learn
      Öğreniyorum = I am learning
      Öğreniyordum = I was learning
      Öğreniyormuşum=I heard/realized that I was learning
      Öğrenmekteyim=I have been learning / I am in (the process of) learning
      Öğrenmekteydim=I had been learning / I was in (the process of) learning
      Öğrenmekteymişim=I heard/noticed that I had been learning
      Öğrenirim =~ I learn (then) > Öğren-e-er-im= I get to learn
      Öğrenirdim= ~I used to learn / I would learn (~I‘d get (a chance) to learn )
      Öğrenirmişim=I heard/noticed that I would be learning ( I realized I’ve got (a chance) to learn)
      Öğreneceğim= I will learn
      Öğrenecektim= I would gonna learn (I would learn)
      Öğrenecekmişim=I heard/ realized that I would have to learn
      Öğrendim = I learned
      Öğrenmiştim= I had learned
      Öğrenmiş oldum (öğrenmiş durumdayım)= I have learned
      Öğrendiydim= I remember having learned /I remember such that I've learned
      Öğrenmişim =I noticed that I've learned
      Öğrendiymişim=I heard that I’ve learned -but if what I heard is true
      Öğrenmişmişim=I heard that I've learned -but what I heard didn't sound very convincing
      Öğreniyorumdur =I guess/likely I am learning
      Öğreniyordurum =I think/likely I was trying to learn
      Öğreniyormuşumdur=As if I was probably learning
      Öğreneceğimdir= I think that I will probably learn
      Öğrenecektirim=I guess/likely I would gonna learn
      Öğrenecekmişimdir=As if I would probably have to learn
      Öğrenecekmiştirim=Seems that I would probably be learned
      Öğrenmişimdir = I think that I have probably learned
      Öğrenmiştirim= I guess/likely I had learned
      𐱅𐰇𐰼𐰰

    • @saymyname9831
      @saymyname9831 Před rokem

      لهجه تو ترکمنستان به لهجه شما نزدیکه ؟ همدیگه رو میفهمین راحت یا سخته براتون؟

    • @mustafa-yx8js
      @mustafa-yx8js Před rokem +1

      @@saymyname9831 من ترکمن هستم ؛؛ آذربایجان رو صد درصد و ازبکی رو نود درصد و ترکیه رو هشتاد درصد می فهمیم ؛؛؛ ولی ترکمنی یه لهجه بسیار قدیمی هستش ؛ برای بقیه سخته بفهمن

    • @mustafa-yx8js
      @mustafa-yx8js Před rokem

      @@saymyname9831 لهجه شمالی ترکمنستان یعنی استان داشاغوز و ترکمن اباد ؛؛ شبیه ازبکی ولی جنوب ترکمنستان با ما ترکمن های ایرانی یکیه

  • @jan-oleniedringhaus3094
    @jan-oleniedringhaus3094 Před rokem +12

    It's very fascinating to see. Me as a German trying to learn a little bit turkish I didn't understand anything of course except the word gün or günüm

    • @PimsleurTurkishLessons
      @PimsleurTurkishLessons Před rokem

      you can learn Turkish at basic level in a month by listening 30 minutes pimsleur lessons per day. then you can listen glossika Turkish-English sentences from easy to hard order in my channel. here are also stories and grammar lessons. video lists. Also i made a video named "Turkish words from Nature sounds". you can learn easily such words. and remember them. with their nature sounds.

    • @Nghilifa
      @Nghilifa Před rokem +3

      "Jan-Ole" That's a very Scandinavian sounding first-middle name combo you've got there! 🙂

    • @jan-oleniedringhaus3094
      @jan-oleniedringhaus3094 Před rokem

      @@Nghilifa Yeah it is. The name Jan is the shorter form of Johannes and Ole the shorter form of Olaf

  • @andrew_be1379
    @andrew_be1379 Před rokem +2

    Very positive vibes from all 3 making it more fun and enjoyable

  • @haerlegalyam1116
    @haerlegalyam1116 Před rokem +6

    Interesting channel! I'm Tatar and I understand them!

  • @togrulbeg764
    @togrulbeg764 Před rokem +6

    İ would love to see more of these... enjoyed it to the fullest

    • @arvandpiltan9833
      @arvandpiltan9833 Před rokem +1

      your profile picture is Nader Shah the persian king

    • @togrulbeg764
      @togrulbeg764 Před rokem +6

      @@arvandpiltan9833 The Turkmen king*... he's from the afshar tribe, thats why he is called nadir afshar and his empire is called afsharid dynasty

    • @repvoo4779
      @repvoo4779 Před rokem +6

      @@togrulbeg764 Persians think everyone who ruled in Iran is Persian/Iranian . You haven't seen them claiming all Turkic empires established in Iran to be Persian empires .

    • @togrulbeg764
      @togrulbeg764 Před rokem +5

      @@repvoo4779 i do see them very often. Let em live in their fairytale dreams

  • @ziadabekmuratova3981
    @ziadabekmuratova3981 Před rokem

    Thank you for fun video👍

  • @ebrar2536
    @ebrar2536 Před rokem +5

    as a turkish i can understand the words pretty easily but i couldn't get the meanings of the sentences because they were all metaphorical. maybe there should be more like daily life sentences

  • @bakhodirjonkakhkharov344

    I am a native uzbek speaker and I speak also turkish. Therefore it`s been easy for me even though I don`t speak tukmen language.

  • @tanjudermanl9111
    @tanjudermanl9111 Před rokem +3

    Thank you so much guys, keep these videos up please, they are so good for comparison of turkish dialects all over the world. I think the Turkmen dialect is much more similar to Uzbek and Uyghur turkish dialects. I have studied both dialects and I am a native Turkish speaker.
    What caught my attention was that, if the two Turkish contestants participating in the video were a little older, if they were for example 40-50 years old, I think they could understand many words and sentences of the Turkmen girl much more easily. Most of the younger generation in Turkey can not understand some older words like (ihlas-ihlas, itikad-itikat etc.) that come from the Arabic language or from the Persian language (Ȃmâde-amade, Beynulmeneli- Beynelminel etc.).
    Great video guys keep it up...!!!❤🧡💛💚💙💜👍👍👍👍

  • @fernandomiller5913
    @fernandomiller5913 Před 4 měsíci +1

    @bahadoralast thanks for videos bro! Great 💯 could you please do a video about Hazara people and compare their language to Turkish/turkic language please? 🌺

  • @m.yusuzbekistantour5958
    @m.yusuzbekistantour5958 Před 11 měsíci +3

    Hi Bahador! Your content is so nice and so useful. I am from Uzbekistan and I live Khorezm province where we speak the local dialect of turkic language. So, I would love to be on your one of your episodes compering it with other turkic languages. And the dialect we speak in Khorezm is pretty close to turkish and azarbaijan languages.
    I am sure it will be interesting.
    So, I hope to hear from!
    all my best wishes to you!!!

  • @SerkanLelion
    @SerkanLelion Před rokem +8

    oh its funny im turkish french, and i realise "iki barmak" (two fingers) also mean little, short, close , in french, "à deux doigts".

  • @robinchen2754
    @robinchen2754 Před rokem +1

    As a Uzbek learner, I love your video so much.

  • @Mirabai_
    @Mirabai_ Před rokem +3

    Oh Gosh I always follow this kind of content, from ecolinguist channel and others but I never could imagine that exists this Turkomenian language! Kuddos to Bahador for the great channel!!!

    • @togrulbeg764
      @togrulbeg764 Před rokem +2

      Like we're 15 million Turkmens. Big populations exists outside Turkmenistan in Afganistan and iran

    • @Mirabai_
      @Mirabai_ Před rokem

      @@togrulbeg764 wow! Not in Turkey as per the name suggests?

    • @herneyse11
      @herneyse11 Před rokem +2

      @@Mirabai_ Turkmen language spoken in Turkmenistan, Iraq, Iran and Afhganistan, Turkish in Turkey.

    • @Mirabai_
      @Mirabai_ Před rokem +1

      @@herneyse11 thank you for the info!!!

    • @togrulbeg764
      @togrulbeg764 Před rokem +1

      @@Mirabai_ in that case all the oghuz are turkmen. But the turkmen around Turkmenistan, Afghanistan and iran have like a different dialect, culture and tradition that may or may not differ from our brethren in the western turkish lands

  • @polyonomata
    @polyonomata Před rokem +8

    I speak Turkish and Azerbaijani, I haven't ever heard Turkmen lamguage however sounds more similar like Azerbaijani. I can understand most of words except sokur etc...

  • @alibalibekbaykal
    @alibalibekbaykal Před rokem +30

    🇹🇲❤️🇹🇷❤️🇦🇿❤️Bahador!

  • @alieren_
    @alieren_ Před rokem +14

    Tüm Türkmenlere selam!

  • @papazataklaattiranimam
    @papazataklaattiranimam Před rokem +32

    Oghuz languges are really similar as much as German dialects but Turkmenistani is the most distinct one due to old east iranic (chorasmian) influence.

    • @papazataklaattiranimam
      @papazataklaattiranimam Před rokem +5

      Turkish people can understand more than 80% of Azeri, Gagauz, Salar, Qashqai but 60-80% of Turkmenistani.

    • @bghn4114
      @bghn4114 Před rokem

      @@papazataklaattiranimam Turkemen language(at least in Iran Gulestan province) has some Mazandarani influence which was quite shocking to me

    • @bghn4114
      @bghn4114 Před rokem

      @@casiogtr4755 ایرادی نداره خر خره دیگع

    • @bghn4114
      @bghn4114 Před rokem

      @@casiogtr4755 گپ شما درست است

    • @papazataklaattiranimam
      @papazataklaattiranimam Před rokem

      @@metmela204 zırva desem

  • @dirdirdeero5279
    @dirdirdeero5279 Před rokem +5

    I miss the old format, where each person has a word bank & the other person tries to guess the word going back & forth until like the last two words where each person makes a short sentence with those word so the other person can guess.

  • @nurettinsarul
    @nurettinsarul Před rokem +7

    "İhlas ile ağlasan kuru gözden yaş çıkar." Bunu tahmin etmek bu kadar zor olmamalıydı.

    • @__Man__
      @__Man__ Před rokem +1

      They're rarely exposed to Arabic words. Turks in the Eastern Turkey and villages will understand the Turkmen more

    • @nurettinsarul
      @nurettinsarul Před rokem +1

      ​@@__Man__ The only Arabic words is "ihlas" but many educated Turks know its meaning.

  • @siavashatashgahi4006
    @siavashatashgahi4006 Před rokem +15

    Hi Bahador, I wish you did a video comparing Iranian Azari and Turkmen. You would be surprised how similar they are.

    • @repvoo4779
      @repvoo4779 Před rokem +15

      Not Azari, It’s Azerbaijani Turkish

    • @siavashatashgahi4006
      @siavashatashgahi4006 Před rokem

      @@repvoo4779 آذری

    • @repvoo4779
      @repvoo4779 Před rokem +9

      @@siavashatashgahi4006 Azeri is an ancient ethnic group that used too live in İranian Azerbaijan and Republic of Azerbaijan , but people of Azerbaijan mixed with oghuz tribes and new people today called Azerbaijanis emerged . People you call Azeri was an ancient ethnic minority that blended with new society and lost . So , it is stupid to call all these people Azeri today , because they aren't .

    • @siavashatashgahi4006
      @siavashatashgahi4006 Před rokem +1

      @@repvoo4779 I thought the intention of this channel was to build bridges across languages/cultures not burning them.
      ای بسا هندو و ترک همزبان
      ای بسا دو ترک چون بیگانگان
      پس زبان محرمی خود دیگر است
      همدلی از همزبانی بهتر است

    • @attomicchicken
      @attomicchicken Před rokem

      @@repvoo4779 If they identify as "Azeri" then what right do you have to diminish their identity?
      A lot of natives are mixed with the DNA of their captives, yet they call themselves natives. It doesn't even have to be that extreme of an example. Unless there was heavy inbreeding going on from where you come from then I can guarantee you won't be 100% whatever you are.

  • @christopheradrien4643
    @christopheradrien4643 Před rokem +5

    I've only just started with Turkish but the other Turkic languages are intriguing

  • @MrAllmightyCornholioz
    @MrAllmightyCornholioz Před rokem +11

    TENGRI BLESS THE SPEAKERS

  • @alonwaterman9309
    @alonwaterman9309 Před rokem +4

    great video.I was really surprised by the turkmen's ق sound. I wonder if it exists in other turkic languages.

    • @orazbekiq9087
      @orazbekiq9087 Před rokem

      In kazakh it exists

    • @togrulbeg764
      @togrulbeg764 Před rokem

      Except turkish, gagauz and i think azerbaijan, it exists in all turkic languages... im not sure about chuvash tho

    • @varolozunyokol3227
      @varolozunyokol3227 Před rokem +1

      @@togrulbeg764we have the hard k sound in literally every anatolian dialect. Only istanbul dialect doesnt have hard k and nasal n

  • @loraivanova8635
    @loraivanova8635 Před 7 měsíci

    As a Bulgarian who has been learning Turkish for years it was very interesting to me to see if I can understand a language similar to Turkish. There are a lot of common words apparently even if they are not always written the same way but the metaphors were difficult to get.

  • @balporsugu7046
    @balporsugu7046 Před rokem +7

    Sarı saçlarına deli gönlümü bağlamışım çözülmüyor Mihriban.

  • @turkmen8716
    @turkmen8716 Před rokem +1

    Well done, Mähriban, dogan! Congrats, guys

  • @SSSS-xj7qg
    @SSSS-xj7qg Před rokem +9

    The word yhlas/ihlas was used in Turkish before. It comes from Arabic and means sincerity. It's like samimi or something like that.

    • @Eren-tv6rt
      @Eren-tv6rt Před rokem +3

      Halis sözcüğüne benziyor kökü aynıdır belki.

    • @awab90
      @awab90 Před rokem +1

      @@Eren-tv6rt aynıdır doğru söylüyorsun

    • @SSSS-xj7qg
      @SSSS-xj7qg Před rokem +2

      @@Eren-tv6rt
      It's from the same root/kökü. Halis means pure/true/genuine and it could also mean sincere. Ihlas is sincerity itself.

    • @togrulbeg764
      @togrulbeg764 Před rokem

      Yes samimi is the right equivalent

    • @lightweight9815
      @lightweight9815 Před rokem

      These 2 people are wannabe Westernized Turks, don't even know their own language. How can one be so stupid to not realize straight away it means Ihlas.

  • @mixsi1588
    @mixsi1588 Před rokem +14

    I love Turkish people 💛💛💛💛

  • @piruz3243
    @piruz3243 Před rokem +5

    Loved Mayra ❤🌹. Her enthusiasm and excitement are so infectious.

  • @user-mt6yc2tz8z
    @user-mt6yc2tz8z Před 7 měsíci +1

    I don't know Turkish but I could easily understand some Arabic words Ekhlass and Eettiqad
    You've done a great job
    Thank you very much indeed . I like comparison of languages and accents ‏‪ with all l❤ve
    Bashar from Syria

  • @dominuss7835
    @dominuss7835 Před rokem +5

    The turkmen girl is so perfectionist that she doesn’t accept anything the turkish guys say 😁

    • @laram5117
      @laram5117 Před rokem

      Turkmen thing 😂Haha 😂

  • @dogruyadogru2461
    @dogruyadogru2461 Před rokem +3

    ilim günüm kullanımı aslında Türkiye'de var. "Ele güne karşı yapayalız, böyle de olmaz ki" diye bir şarkı bile var. Dede Korkut hikayelerinde el gün ifadesi geçer. İl, Türkiye'de el şeklinde telaffuz ediliyor ve insan toplluluğu, halk manasında. İl, yani el aynı zamanda yer bölge manasında da kullanılır.

  • @NoMady688
    @NoMady688 Před rokem +3

    7:30 enquanto você estiver com olhos abertos a chance de chorar sempre será a mesma. Não importa o que você sinta.

  • @aileen0711
    @aileen0711 Před rokem +15

    I was born in Germany but was raised bilingually speaking Turkish and German. I absolutely LOVED watching this video. I also found it super interesting how all of them are not only connected by their Turkic languages but also with their Germanic ones (German and Dutch are also really similar). It would probably be extremely cool to see them compare Dutch to German, too. What I liked about Mihriban‘s proverbs was that (especially the last one) were almost completely translatable into Turkish word for word with almost identical words in both languages. But the meaning was not completely the same because proverbs just cannot be translated. It would‘ve been nice to have used normal sentences rather than proverbs/sayings to showcase the similarity between these two languages better. And maybe you could include the sentence in all three languages next time (language A, language B and English). Thank you for this video!!!! :)

    • @Abeturk
      @Abeturk Před rokem

      Su=water /水 (Suv)=fluent-flowing Suvu> Sıvı=fluid, liquid
      Suv-up =liquefied (~soup)
      Suv-mak= to make it flow onwards or upwards (>suvamak)
      Suy-mak= to make it flow over
      Süv-mek= to make it flow inwards
      Sür-mek= to make it flow ON something
      Sur-up(şurup)=syrup / Suruppah(chorba)=soup /Suruppat(şerbet)=sorbet /meşrubat=beverage /şarap=wine
      Süp-mek= to make it flow outwards / Süp-der-mek>süptürmek>süpürmek=to sweep
      Say-mak= to make it flow drop by drop (one by one from the mind) = ~ to count ~ to deem (sayı=number) (bilgisayar=computer)
      Söy-mek= to make it flow from the mind / Söy-le-mek= to make the sentences flowing through the mind = to say, ~to tell
      Sev-mek= to make it flow(pour) from the mind to the heart = to love
      Söv-mek=to say whatever's on own mind (~call names)
      Süy-mek= to make it flow through (Süyüt> süt= milk)
      Soy-mak= to make it flow over it/him/her ( to peel, ~to strip, ~to rob ) (Suy-en-mak)>soyunmak=to undress
      (Suy-der-mak)>sıyırmak= ~skinning , ~skimming
      Siy-mek= to make it flow downwards / to pee Siyitik>sidik= urine
      Sağ-mak= ~to make it pour down (Sağanak=downpour)
      Sağ-en-mak>Sağınmak= ~to spill it from thought into emotions> ~longing
      Sağn-mak>San-mak= ~to get it pour from thought to idea(to arrive at a guess)
      Sak-en-mak> Sakınmak =~to ponder hard/ worry out/ beware
      Sav-mak= ~to make it pour outward /put forward / set forth in >Sahan=the container to pour water
      (Sav-en-mak)>savunmak=to defend (Sav-en-al-mak)>savunulmak=to get being defended
      (Sav-eş-mak)1.savaşmak=to pour blood / to shed each other's blood (savaş= war)
      2.savuşmak=to get spilled around (altogether/downright)> sıvışmak=~running away in fear
      Soğ-mak=to penetrate inwards Soğ-der-mak>soğurmak=~ make it spread in own essence
      Sok-mak= ~to put/take it (by forcing) inward
      Sök-mek= ~take/put it (by forcing) outward (~unstitch)
      Sık-mak = ~to squeeze (by forcing)/tighten (Sıkı= stringent)
      Sığ-mak= ~fit inside
      Süz-mek=~to make it lightly flow from up to downwards (~to filter, strain out)
      Sez-mek=~to make it lightly flow into the mind (~to perceive, to intuit)
      Sız-mak=~to get flowed slightly/slowly (~to infiltrate)
      Suŋ-mak=to extend forwards (presentation, exhibition, to offer)
      Süŋ-mek=to get expanded outwards (sünger=sponge) (süngü=bayonet)
      Sıŋ-mak=to reach by extending up or forwards
      Siŋ-mek=to shrink (oneself) by getting down or back (to lurk, to hide out)
      Söŋ-mek=to get decreased by getting out or in oneself (to get extinguished)
      mak/mek>(emek)=exertion /process
      al-mak =~to get/ ~to have
      et-mek=~ to make /~to do
      der-mek= ~to provide
      en=own diameter
      eş=partner
      Tan= the dawn /旦
      Tanımak= to recognize (~to get the differences of)
      Tanılamak=tanı-la-mak= diagnose /to identify
      Tanınmak = tanı-en-mak= to be known/recognized
      Tanıtmak = tanı-et-mak=to make known /to introduce
      Tanışmak=tanı-eş-mak= to get to know each other =(to meet for the first time)
      Danışmak= to get information through each other
      Tıŋı= the tune (timbre) /调 /ட்யூன்
      Tıŋ-mak=to react verbally
      Tıŋı-la-mak= to get the sound out >(Tınlamak=~reacting /answering /~to take heed of)
      Tiŋ-mek=to get at the silence >Dinmek= to calm down / to get quiescent
      Tiŋi-le-mek=to get the sound in >(Dinlemek= to listen / 听)
      Çığ (chuw) = snowslide / 雪崩
      Çığ-ur-mak =çığırmak= ~to scream / ~to sing shouting
      Çığırı > Jigir > Shiur> Şiir = Poetry / 诗歌
      Cır-la-mak > Jırlamak > to squeal / shouting with a shrill noise
      Çığırgı > Jırgı> Shuirgı> Şarkı = Song / 曲子
      Çağ-ur-mak =çağırmak= calling - inviting / 称呼 / 邀请
      Çağrı = Calling / 称呼
      Uç > ~up-side (endpoint) (o-bir-uç=burç=extreme point= bourge) / tepe=~top-point
      (Uç-mak)= to fly (~go up)
      (Uç-a-var)> Uçar=it flies (has a chance to fly / arrives by flying)
      (Uç-ma-bas)> uçmaz= doesn't fly (~gives up flying / doesn't bother to fly)
      (Uç-der-ma-bas) >uçturmaz> uçurmaz= doesn't fly it (doesn't make it fly)
      (Uç-eş-ma-bas)>uçuşmaz= doesn't (all)together fly
      (Uç-al-ma-bas)>uçulmaz= no one has gotten to fly /~no one's allowed to fly
      İç > ~in-side (inner)
      (İç-mek) = to drink (include inside) / İç-der-mek> içermek= to contain
      (Bu Adam Çay İç-e-er)>> Bu adam çay içer=This man gets to drink tea>This man drinks tea then
      (Aç-mak)= to open (to see/show inside)
      (Aş-mak)=~to exceed /go beyond
      Dış> ~out-side
      (Dış-a-aş-mak)>Taşmak =~overflow
      Taş = the stone
      Taşı-mak =~to move it to a different place
      Taşı-et-mak =Taşıtmak> to make it moved to a different place
      Taşı-en-mak =Taşınmak>~to move ownself to a different place
      Der-mek= (~to provide) to set the layout by bringing together (der-le-mek= to compile)
      Dar-mak= to bring into a different order by disrupting the old (thara-mak=to comb)
      Dur-mak= to keep being present/there (~to remain/~to survive)
      thuror =permanent /hë thor>hıdır>hızır>hazır=existent>ready (boğa-thor>bahadır=hero)
      Dur-der-mak> durdurmak= ~to stop
      Dür-mek= to roll it up (to make it become a roll)
      Dör-mek= to rotate on its axis ( Thörmek>old meaning)- to stir /to mix (current meaning)
      (döngü)törüş/törüv=tour (törüv-çi / törüv-giş=tourist / thörük halk=mixed people among themself
      (Thöre-mek)>türemek= to get created a new layout/form by coming together in the same medium (tür= kind / type)
      Töre=the order established over time= custom/tradition > (torah=sacred order) (tarih=history)
      Thör-et-mek=türetmek= to create a new layout by adding in each other= to derive
      Thör-en-mek>dörünmek= to rotate oneself /(2. to turn by oneself)
      Thör-en-mek>>dörn-mek>Dönmek= to turn oneself
      (Dön-der-mek)>döndürmek= to turn something
      (Dön-eş-mek)>dönüşmek= to turn (altogether) to something
      (Dön-eş-der-mek)>dönüştürmek= to convert/ to transform
      Eğ-mek=to turn something the other way or to a curved shape> eğmek= to tilt/ to bend
      Eğ-al-mek=Eğilmek=to get being inclined/ to be bent over
      Eğ-et-mek=Eğitmek=to educate
      Eğir-mek= to turn around itself by bending it or make it turn to another way in a specified time =~ to spin (eğri =curve /awry)
      Evir-mek=to make it turn upside or turn up in other way over a specified time =~to invert /make it turn to something different in a specified time
      Eğir-al-mek=Eğrilmek= to become a skew / to become twisted
      Evir-al-mek=Evrilmek= to get a conversion/transformation over time
      (evrim=evolution evren=universe)
      Uğra-mak= to get (at) a place or a situation for a specified time> uğramak= drop by/ stop by
      Uğra-eş-mak=to stop altogether by into each other for a specified time> uğraşmak=to strive/ to deal with
      Uğra-et-mak= uğratmak = to put in a situation for a specific time (uğru = the way of)
      Öğre-mek=to get (at) a status or a level / to get an accumulation within a certain time
      Öğre-en-mek=to get (at) a knowledge or a knowledge level at a certain time> öğrenmek= to learn
      Öğre-et-mek=to have somebody get (at) a knowledge / level (at a certain time)= to teach
      Türkçe öğretiyorum =I am teaching turkish
      İngilizce öğreniyorsun = You are learning english
      Öğreniyorsun = You are learning > Öğren-i-yor-u-sen= You try to learn
      Öğreniyorum = I am learning
      Öğreniyordum = I was learning
      Öğreniyormuşum=I heard/realized that I was learning
      Öğrenmekteyim=I have been learning / I am in (the process of) learning
      Öğrenmekteydim=I had been learning / I was in (the process of) learning
      Öğrenmekteymişim=I heard/noticed that I had been learning
      Öğrenirim =~ I learn (then) > Öğren-e-er-im= I get to learn
      Öğrenirdim= ~I used to learn / I would learn (~I‘d get (a chance) to learn )
      Öğrenirmişim=I heard/noticed that I would be learning ( I realized I’ve got (a chance) to learn)
      Öğreneceğim= I will learn
      Öğrenecektim= I would gonna learn (I would learn)
      Öğrenecekmişim=I heard/ realized that I would have to learn
      Öğrendim = I learned
      Öğrenmiştim= I had learned
      Öğrenmiş oldum (öğrenmiş durumdayım)= I have learned
      Öğrendiydim= I remember having learned /I remember such that I've learned
      Öğrenmişim =I noticed that I've learned
      Öğrendiymişim=I heard that I’ve learned -but if what I heard is true
      Öğrenmişmişim=I heard that I've learned -but what I heard didn't sound very convincing
      Öğreniyorumdur =I guess/likely I am learning
      Öğreniyordurum =I think/likely I was trying to learn
      Öğreniyormuşumdur=As if I was probably learning
      Öğreneceğimdir= I think that I will probably learn
      Öğrenecektirim=I guess/likely I would gonna learn
      Öğrenecekmişimdir=As if I would probably have to learn
      Öğrenecekmiştirim=Seems that I would probably be learned
      Öğrenmişimdir = I think that I have probably learned
      Öğrenmiştirim= I guess/likely I had learned
      𐱅𐰇𐰼𐰰

    • @afsharkaghan5534
      @afsharkaghan5534 Před rokem

      Are you half German half Turkish?

    • @aileen0711
      @aileen0711 Před rokem

      @@afsharkaghan5534 Yes.

  • @pritamroy8872
    @pritamroy8872 Před rokem

    Mr. Bahadoor please make a video on Sanskrit with one Slavic language.

  • @Bouquetdenerf
    @Bouquetdenerf Před rokem +1

    if you ask the meaning of sokur it could be waayy easier to solve:D I love this, so fun 💗 içten ağlarsan kör gözden yaş gelir

  • @davidsinatra3011
    @davidsinatra3011 Před rokem +7

    Bu kızçenin tepkileri niye bu kadar aşırı? Şimal nerdesin şimaağl

  • @jahongrmrzo1821
    @jahongrmrzo1821 Před rokem +1

    Mr.Alast can you compare mongolian and any turkic language, please.

  • @trekkingchannel4752
    @trekkingchannel4752 Před rokem +3

    Very nice

  • @mehmetsubas8164
    @mehmetsubas8164 Před rokem +8

    I think we can translate the first sentence to Turkish like this: "Bilgisi güçlü olan bileği güçlü olanı yıkar."

    • @DarkMSG
      @DarkMSG Před rokem +3

      no that's not the exact translation more like this: "Bileği güçlü olan birini yıkar, Bilgisi güçlü olan herkesi"

    • @Chichi-dc9rd
      @Chichi-dc9rd Před rokem

      Münini=tümünü

    • @onepolygot3695
      @onepolygot3695 Před rokem

      Evet "Bileği güçlü olan birini yıkar, bilgisi güçlü olan binini. yani bilgisi güçlü olan bin insanı yıkar ( müñ - bin 1000).

  • @torinjones3221
    @torinjones3221 Před rokem +2

    First girl kept it short. Next two felt the need to give me their lifes story for whatever reason

  • @sunsun9372
    @sunsun9372 Před rokem +2

    Dış görünüşten bile aynı ırka ait olduğumuz belli. Hepimiz yumuk gözlüyüz. ^_^

  • @stevanruutana4913
    @stevanruutana4913 Před rokem +1

    May I join this game as well? I'll be grateful.

  • @TheShocktrauma
    @TheShocktrauma Před rokem

    You should put me on there for Turkish Bahadır

  • @lyricspage5569
    @lyricspage5569 Před rokem +4

    I understood turkmen very well as an Azerbaijani. Well, Turkmen is second closest language to Azerbaijani after Turkish

  • @peybak
    @peybak Před rokem +5

    Bahador, you should give prizes when people correctly guess.

    • @BahadorAlast
      @BahadorAlast  Před rokem +1

      We used to when we were doing it in-person

  • @sbd03
    @sbd03 Před rokem +6

    Turkmens and Turkish are same. Both are Oghus Turks.

  • @EnginAtik
    @EnginAtik Před rokem +4

    “Split tongue” gets you in trouble. I don’t think this was resolved: Having a big tongue means to talk/gossip etc a lot; having split tongue like a snake (“Catal dil”) probably means to lie a lot which definitely gets one in trouble.

  • @nightowl1826
    @nightowl1826 Před rokem +2

    This is great because we don't hear much about Turkmen in the world and it is very important for the people to know.

  • @trinibagowaynecaribbean1611

    Both of them are pretty.

  • @MudarOsmann
    @MudarOsmann Před rokem +8

    İçtenlikle ağlarsan, kör bir gözden yaş gelir.

  • @kamilkamilli1228
    @kamilkamilli1228 Před rokem +1

    It's very very easy for an Azerbaijani(me) to understand both but I'm shocked they're struggling that much.

    • @repvoo4779
      @repvoo4779 Před rokem +1

      Onlar altdakı yazıları görmürlər , onu da hesaba al .

  • @barbarossa9591
    @barbarossa9591 Před rokem +35

    Turkish lady is gorgeus

  • @ulugbekbahrom
    @ulugbekbahrom Před rokem

    I heard once. There were 5 things to differ nation from another. But there is one now. That is the language.

  • @galatasarayforever235
    @galatasarayforever235 Před rokem +16

    Hugs to Turkic world❤️

  • @Vildann_krtl
    @Vildann_krtl Před 6 měsíci +1

    I understood most of the words, this is great❤ i love turk countries

  • @NoMady688
    @NoMady688 Před rokem

    4:33 se refere ao fato de que quando voce luta, você mantém o seu punho ocupado apenas um oponente, mas se você usar o cérebro você pode lutar com mais de uma pessoa ao mesmo tempo.

  • @saidakhmadsaidaskharov7386

    If you cry sincerely you will have tears falling down even if you are blind

    • @sevketyuyucu8594
      @sevketyuyucu8594 Před rokem +1

      Son atasözü’nün türkçede bir çok karşılığı var: Örnek: Sükut (susmak) altındır, veya Eline diline beline sahip ol (dikkat et) gibi..

    • @jovicatrpcevski209
      @jovicatrpcevski209 Před rokem

      Bu son atasözü Bektaşi bir meselidir. Onların babaları öylece öğretiyorlar.

  • @richcrown1176
    @richcrown1176 Před 3 měsíci

    As an uzbek despite that we are neighbors i could understand written turkmen but it was very hard catch her speech

  •  Před rokem +1

    That’s how I felt when I first participated

  • @attomicchicken
    @attomicchicken Před rokem +4

    Annam, kızın son "yeah" demesi beni öldürtdü. O kadar içten dedi ki 😂😂😂 rahatladı galiba.
    ---
    "iki karış" is often used as a pejorative in Turkish to bring someone down for perceived presumptuous actions. "How dare you act so grand and big when you only have 2 finger widths of height." Their minds automatically associated the sentence with a negative connotation as that's how it's used in the day-to-day.
    I remember one episode where I can't remember if it was the Farsi speakers or arabic speakers who referred to the cucumber as "hıyar". It's true that it is sometimes used in communities generally who lead a village life but generally, you wouldn't opt for "hıyar" as it's usually said to someone acting like an imbecile/ bafoon.

  • @maratsatbay1158
    @maratsatbay1158 Před 9 dny

    if you cry from the heart, tears will come from blind eyes